Using e-learning to self regulate the learning process of mathematics for engineering students

Mathematics at an undergraduate level is frequently presented to the students in quite a traditional way. When implementing the Bologna education reform in Portuguese universities, the number of contact hours of the courses decreased, therefore increasing the need of a more self-responsible learning...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brito, Irene (author)
Other Authors: Figueiredo, Jorge Manuel (author), Flores, Maria Assunção (author), Jesus, Ana (author), Machado, Gaspar J. (author), Malheiro, Teresa (author), Pereira, P. A. (author), Pereira, Rui M. S. (author), Vaz, Estelita (author)
Format: conferencePaper
Language:eng
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1822/13908
Country:Portugal
Oai:oai:repositorium.sdum.uminho.pt:1822/13908
Description
Summary:Mathematics at an undergraduate level is frequently presented to the students in quite a traditional way. When implementing the Bologna education reform in Portuguese universities, the number of contact hours of the courses decreased, therefore increasing the need of a more self-responsible learning by the student. This means that the student has to work by himself (i.e., outside lectures and examples classes) on a regular basis. This implies that the lecturer is supposed to plan the students work, in principle weekly basis. In this paper we intend to describe an experience made at the Department of Mathematics for Science and Technology of the University of Minho in Portugal. Using an e-learning platform specially designed for teaching Mathematics called Maple T. A., we designed, programmed and made available for the students various sets of exercises organized in Question Banks on the course of Calculus. The advantage of this platform is that if properly designed, the questions can be always different and with different methods of solving (because of the use of random variables), the student can do it whenever and wherever he is (he does it via internet) and it feedback is made available to the students as soon as he submits the exercise. At the end of the year and with the aim of being able to evaluate how did the students feel about this experience, the students were given a survey implemented on the e-learning platform. The results of this survey strongly suggest, among other things, that using Maple T.A. helped the students in the study of the course of Calculus, and that it helped to achieve better results on the course.